Contenu connexe Similaire à POPSIS at 15th PSI Group Meeting (20) Plus de ePSI Platform (20) POPSIS at 15th PSI Group Meeting1. POPSIS
Pricing of PSI Study
15th PSI Group Meeting
Patrick Wauters
pwauters@deloitte.com
Lionel Kapff
lkapff@deloitte.com
Marc De Vries
info@devriesmarc.nl
Luxembourg, 13th September 2011
2. Agenda
Study purpose and context 3
Study approach and methodology 5
Case studies overview 9
Main findings from case study analysis 11
Conclusions 22
Q&A
Annexes
• Cost recovery ratios
• PSI policy changes and effects
• Transition financing measures of selected PSBs
2 © 2011 Deloitte
4. Study purpose and context
Study purpose
• Assessment of different models of supply and charging for PSI and their effects
• Based on 21 in-depth public sector body case studies across Europe
Study context
• Forthcoming review of PSI Directive 2003/98/EC
• 2010 EC public consultation on PSI Directive 2003/98/EC
• Open Data movement getting momentum
• Increasing PSI re-use activities
• Growing political interest in PSI re-use and pricing
• Growing body of academic literature on PSI pricing
→ POPSIS supports the debate through the provision of evidence
4 © 2011 Deloitte
7. Definitions: PSI charging models
Profit-maximization
“Setting a price to maximize profit given the demand faced by the PSB. Where the product being
supplied does not face competition then this will naturally result in monopoly pricing.” *
Cost-recovery
“Setting a price equal to average long-run costs (including, for example, all fixed costs related to data
production).” *
Partial cost-recovery
Full cost-recovery > Partial cost recovery > Re-use facilitation cost recovery
Re-use facilitation cost-recovery
The charging policy whereby only the costs related to the facilitation of re-use are charged (‘re-use
facilitation cost-recovery’) is part of the cost-recovery model, but is at the very low end of the spectrum.
It only includes costs that can truly be allocated to the re-users, for instance, the salary costs of the
help desk. Thus, this approach does not imply that any costs are incurred in the framework of the
public task or own re-use activities by the PSB itself.
Marginal cost and zero cost pricing
“Setting a price equal to the short run marginal cost of supplying data” *, that is, the cost of supplying
data to an extra user. When considering digital data, this cost is essentially zero and marginal cost and
zero cost pricing are identical.
* Cf. Pollock (2009): The Economics of Public Sector Information.
7 © 2011 Deloitte
8. Study approach and methodology
• Input from sectoral experts and European Commission for case study selection
• About 20 preparatory interviews
• Participation in key PSI stakeholder events
• POPSIS case study protocol
• Guidance for desk research and field work
• Interview guides
• Case study reporting template
• Expert validation meeting
• Robbin ten Velde
• Raimundo Iemma
• Graham Vickery
8 © 2011 Deloitte
10. Case studies overview: 21 Public Sector Bodies covered
POPSIS objective A: POPSIS objective B:
Changed charging policy Cost-recovery policy
Business registers • IT: Infocamere
• NL: KvK
• UK: Companies House
Geographic • AT: BEV • DE: SenStadt
information • DK: DECA • DE: BKG
• ES: IGN-CNIG • IT: Italian Cadastre
• ES: Spanish Cadastre • NL: Dutch Cadastre
• FR: French Cadastre
• UK: Ordnance Survey
Meteorological • NL: KNMI • DE: DWD
information • NO: Met.no
• SI: ARSO
Other PSI domains • DE: DeStatis • FR: SIRCOM
• FR: DILA • ES: CENDOJ
10 © 2011 Deloitte
13. Main findings from the case studies
• The case studies show a clear trend towards lowering charges and/or facilitating re-
use (16 out of the 21 cases).
o Some PSBs only charge for commercial re-use and allow non-commercial re-use
either against reduced fees (7 out of 21 cases) or for free (9 out of 21 cases).
o In almost all cases, PSBs allow free access to their PSI (viewing without copying). In
some cases, free access has been the forerunner of a more flexible re-use regime.
• In those case studies where cost-recovery regimes are applied, the calculation basis
for determining PSI re-use charges appears to be weak.
o In discussions with interviewees, the PSBs' concerned were mostly unable to
explain the basis for their PSI cost allocation.
o In some cases, the setting of charges seems to be oriented towards filling budgetary
gaps rather than being geared to the cost-oriented tariff-setting required under the
PSI Directive 2003/98/EC.
• In all the case studies, the PSI re-use revenues of PSBs range from relatively small
to extremely small when compared to the total budget of the PSB concerned.
o 10 out of 21 cases have cost recovery ratios of below 1%.
• Based on their own raw data, the number of PSBs that exploit added-value products
is limited (7 out of 21 cases) and appears to be decreasing over time.
13 © 2011 Deloitte
15. Downstream effects of lowered charges
• In those cases where PSBs moved to marginal and zero cost charging or cost-recovery
that is limited to re-use facilitation costs only, the number of re-users increased by
between 1,000% and 10,000%.
Case study Increase
BEV Number of datasets sold: 200% - 7,000% increase
DECA Number of re-users: 10,000% increase
Turnover re-users: 1,000% increase
Destatis Number of unique visitors: 1,800% increase
Number of downloads: 800% increase
IGN-CNIG Volume of data services: 200% increase
Number of users: 200% increase
KNMI Number of re-users: 1,000% increase
Turnover re-users: 400% increase
Met.no Number of re-users: 3,000% increase
Turnover re-users: more than 200% increase
Spanish Cadastre Number of downloads: from 800% to 1,900% increase for various datasets.
• Lowering charges may attract new types of re-users, in particular SMEs.
o This also applies to cases where the price cuts have been less significant (or even
absent), but where special pricing schemes for SMEs were introduced.
15 © 2011 Deloitte
17. Upstream effects of lowered charges
• All case studies where PSBs have lowered their prices demonstrate that demand
volumes expand strongly (there have been increases of up to 7,000%).
o In some cases, PSI sales revenues can remain stable or even increase after
drastic price cuts due to the growing demand.
o Of course, once charges are zero, revenues are also zero.
• Costs appear to increase very little: in fact, they may eventually decrease if the
volumes of re-use grow significantly. Once re-use facilitation processes are properly
organized, they become sub-routines within the PSB. To a large extent, they become
embedded in the PSB's public task-funded activities at no extra cost.
• Zero cost pricing has the additional advantage that transaction costs decrease
significantly. This decrease applies not only to administrative costs, such as invoicing,
but also to costs related to the monitoring of compliance with license arrangements.
• Several PSBs have reported that intensified ties with re-users may lead to improved
data quality and process efficiency since any deficiencies in the data are promptly
flagged up and reported back to the PSB.
o When the interest in data quality is shared, quality control is partly outsourced.
17 © 2011 Deloitte
19. Obstacles to change
• A large majority of PSBs interviewed do not seem to have fundamental objections to
lowering charges. Yet, PSBs that rely on sales revenues from PSI and their own
value-added products appear to be stuck in a situation of deadlock:
o Although they are sympathetic to lowering charges and allowing more data re-use,
their dependency on sales revenues compels them to protect their current revenue
streams when there is no other sustainable alternative income stream available.
o Such an alternative income stream can often only be provided by the Treasury,
since the benefits from lowered charges are often concentrated in the form of
increased tax gains.
o Thus, the power to enable change does not necessarily lie with the Ministry
willing to support the move, let alone with the PSB concerned.
• Further barriers to change relate to statutory provisions imposing cost-recovery
schemes, the legacy of old re-use regimes, and the sheer difficulty of changing
existing practices.
• In addition, in several cases, incumbent re-users with considerable interests in the
preservation of the status quo are trying to prevent PSBs from lowering charges in order
to keep barriers to entry high.
o Some re-users are reported as lobbying actively and sometimes even litigating to
prevent PSBs from adopting lower charges.
19 © 2011 Deloitte
21. Enablers of change
• Change appears to be brought about both bottom-up and top-down.
• In the cases of bottom-up change, PSBs that moved towards lower charges were often
driven by the notion that making data available and serving re-users is part of their
core public task.
o In many cases, the momentum was driven by inspired leaders in the PSBs who took
action within the limitations of the existing framework.
o In most of these cases, the business case was made upfront to justify the reason
for change. The costs, the benefits and the financing of the transition process had
to be shown clearly.
o Quite often, interviewees acknowledged that, ultimately, there was often a significant
‘leap of faith’. However, the rationale for making such a leap was often harnessed
after two aspects of potential efficiency and effectiveness were made clear: the
fractional contribution of the re-use revenues and the gains to be achieved.
• In other cases, the need for change was imposed top-down either through a clear
political decision or occasionally by a policy move made by another PSB that possessed
the same data.
o In these cases, the PSB’s negotiating position was somewhat different. Often, the
PSB managed to obtain a form of compensation for its drop in income: this was
particularly the case where the revenues from its own exploitation were of some
significance and entailed a reorganization process.
21 © 2011 Deloitte
23. Conclusions
The case study analysis indicates that:
• The potential benefits of lowered charges for PSI re-use can be high.
o Lowered charges can lead to more economic activity, market dynamism, innovation
and employment.
o They may also entail efficiency gains for the PSBs.
• The potential costs of lowering PSI charges appear to be low.
• Unless zero cost pricing is applied, the price mechanism may actually increase the
revenues rather than lowering them.
• The costs of a transition to lower PSI charges appear to be relatively low. This is
because, to a large extent, the knowledge and infrastructure needed by the PSBs
already exist.
• The main effort lies in an adjustment of processes and mindsets to serve PSI re-
users most effectively.
23 © 2011 Deloitte
27. Cost recovery ratios: 10 out of 21 cases below 1%
Country Public sector body Sector Cost-recovery ratio
IT Infocamere Business register 31.31%
NL KvK Business register 19.50%
UK Companies House Business register 20.73%
AT BEV Geographic information < 26.5%
DE BKG Geographic information 0.24%
DE SenStadt Geographic information 10.38%
DK DECA Geographic information 0.82%
ES IGN-CENIG Geographic information 4.12%
ES Spanish Cadastre Geographic information 0.00%
FR French cadastre Geographic information 0.55%
IT Italian cadastre Geographic information 0.50%
NL Dutch cadastre Geographic information 6.57%
UK Ordnance Survey Geographic information 16.54%
DE DWD Meteorological information 0.93%
NL KNMI Meteorological information 0.45%
NO Met.no Meteorological information 0.00%
SI ARSO Meteorological information 6.00%
ES CENDOJ Legal information 16.67%
FR DILA Legal information 0.67%
FR SIRCOM Fuel prices information 15.91%
DE DeStatis Statistical information 0.11%
27 © 2011 Deloitte
29. PSI policy changes and effects (1/3)
Case study Policy change Effects
KNMI 1999 2010 (cumulative)
•Switch from full cost-recovery charging to recovery of the re- •Private sector grew turnover by 400%.
use facilitation costs only. •Boosted re-user employment by 300%.
•Leading to an 80% decrease in price for the full KNMI national •Stimulated innovation.
meteorological dataset. •Gave rise to new business models.
•Abstinence from its own commercial activities. •Extra tax gains amount to total of 35 M EUR.
•Selling off the commercial arm. •Internal efficiency gains of 3.5 M EUR.
•Re-use department now run by 1.5 FTE.
•Data quality and service delivery enhanced.
•Level of professionalism increased.
DECA 2002 2010 (cumulative)
•Under a ‘free of charge' agreement a central database of all •Increased turnover of re-use market by 1,000%.
Danish addresses was created, driven by public task ambitions. •Number of re-users went up by 10,000%.
•Local PSBs were compensated for losses and rewarded by •Boosted FTEs employed by re-users by 800% - 1,000%.
free re-use. •Tax gains exceed PSB investment by 400%.
•By distinguishing between the public sector investment and •Almost 100% decrease on variable charges and relatively small fixed
subsequent exploitation of the facility created, allocating the costs (0.01 M EUR).
costs to those that benefit, there was no need to rely on cost- •Self-propelling and financing re-use system maximizing the multiplier
recovery above the re-use facilitation cost level. effects in downstream markets.
•An open network of distributors was established, acquiring PSI
against re-use facilitation costs only.
•No re-use limitations.
Met.no 2007 2011 (cumulative)
•Moved to a liberal re-use policy, driven by internal •Downstream effects are significant where the number of unique weekly
commitment. re-users increased massively from around 100 to almost 3,000.
•All weather data, including most data from ECMWF partners, •Met.no serves a need felt throughout Europe (and beyond) since over
was opened up for free and anonymous re-use. 40% of re-users are from outside Norway.
•Stepped forward in the value chain, providing full service •Re-users appear to be SMEs integrating data in their own content
forecasts to all citizens, forcing re-users to further innovate. services for large groups of users (rather than adding high-resolution
•Actively promoted its re-use philosophy in international fora. value) and App builders.
•Establishing a direct link with citizens assures the quality of the data
(through feedback) and embeds the public business case (and the public
funding) protecting it against reverse currents.
29 © 2011 Deloitte
30. PSI policy changes and effects (2/3)
Case study Policy change Effects
BEV 2006 2009 and 2010
•Moved from a complex full cost-recovery pricing regime based •Substantial increase in the number of datasets sold: sales for many BEV
on the costs of mainly analogue products (such as paper maps) PSI products increased significantly: cartographic products by 200%-
to a simplified partial cost-recovery pricing and licensing model 1,500%; digital ortho-images by 7,000%; digital cadastral map and
with drastic price cuts of up to 97% elevation model by 250%; digital landscape model by 1,000%.
•Regular reviews (2008, 2010). •Total revenues from re-use facilitation slightly increased, in spite of big
•Introduction of a web portal. price cuts.
•The bulk of the additional demand comes from Austrian SMEs.
Destatis 2004 – 2006 2010
•Dissemination and communication strategy was focused on the •Table downloads increased by 840% (130,271 in 2004 to 1,092,938 in
internet as the main data distribution channel. 2010).
•All downloads from the online shop were made available free •Around 25% of the users are private sector users.
of charge. •Costs of re-use and FTEs working on facilitation of re-use have
•Portfolio of print publications was drastically reduced. remained stable.
•Users have to register only for personalized services available •Re-use facilitation costs are in balance with revenues.
against very limited re-use facilitation costs.
•Liberalization of intellectual property rights.
Spanish Pre April 2011 Post April 2011
Cadastre •Until April 2011 there was a high usage of digital certificates •The new download service introduced in April 2011 has been very
(over four million and a half per year) and online consultation by successful in its first weeks of operation: it has already had over 1,152
citizens. Only a few companies were purchasing data for less registered re-users.
than 330K a year. •The weekly volume of alphanumeric data downloads has increased in
•A new download model was introduced on April 5, 2011 which only one week by 1,900%, from 67 to 1,203, and the total number of
enables mass PSI downloads for free. downloads by of digital maps by 800%, from 275 to 2,101. While the total
downloads have increased by nearly 1,000% from 342 to over 3,300.
30 © 2011 Deloitte
31. PSI policy changes and effects (3/3)
Case study Policy change Effects
IGN-CNIG Pre-2008 Post 2008
•Prior to 2008, all the PSI was for sale. •Today means over 40 re-users (the majority of them are SMEs) are
•Prior to 2008, there were only ten re-users (including both purchasing the information for commercial purposes.
commercial and non-commercial re-users). Hence the increase •Since October 2010, the volume of data services and users has
has been remarkable. doubled.
•Between 2008 and February 2010, there have been about 165,257
requests from 37,417 non-commercial re-users.
Ordnance April 2010 2011
Survey •Introduction of tiered ‘freemium model’ of data provision. •The full impact of changes is yet to be tested empirically.
•The lowest tier of the model provides access to information in •Re-users suggest wider availability of free data has led more people to
four product categories (topographic mapping, address location, use this resource.
route networks and consumer mapping) for free at the point of •Re-users suggest that greater use has led to an increase in the
use. assistance they provide to help the new users to use the free data
effectively.
31 © 2011 Deloitte
33. Transition financing measures of selected PSBs (1/2)
Case study name Charging regime move Financing measures
DECA Nonexistent re-use facilitation - Compensation towards municipalities through:
cost recovery. • One-off payment;
• Future free use of database.
- 3 M EUR budget to cover the investments to be made.
- Clear self-financing exploitation plan for future re-users.
KNMI Cost-recovery + own added value - Public funding of reorganisation for privatising the
products re-use facilitation cost commercial arm.
recovery. - 0.2 M EUR funding for investments.
- Clear self-financing exploitation plan for future re-users.
Met.no Cost-recovery zero cost pricing - Compensation of 125,000 EUR from the Ministry.
(+ re-use facilitation cost recovery - Other transition costs (a small amount) were covered by
for ‘guaranteed delivery’). own resources.
UK Ordnance Survey Cost-recovery zero costing at - Introduction of tiered ‘freemium model’ of data provision in
the point of use for some less April 2010, state funding was facilitated to enable ‘free
granular products. Higher quality distribution’ of lower quality data.
products still attract a fee. - Full impact yet to be assessed.
IGN-CNIG Cost-recovery zero - Marginal costs request and commercial re-users sales have
costing/marginal cost for non- allowed the maintenance of a similar level of income to
commercial re-users. before 2008 (many small transactions as opposed to only a
few large ones).
33 © 2011 Deloitte
34. Transition financing measures of selected PSBs (2/2)
Case study name Charging regime move Financing measures
BEV Cost-recovery cost-recovery - No additional state funding. Price cuts were financed by
(with price cuts of up to 97%). increased demand.
- The transition was financed by own resources.
- PSI sales revenues went up by 46% after four years.
Destatis Cost-recovery zero cost pricing - Transition costs were very low and financed by own
(+ premium accounts). resources.
- Part of the transition was financed by the cutting of
administrative costs (e.g. licensing and online shop
operation).
Spanish Cadastre Cost-recovery zero cost pricing. - Transition costs are covered by the State budget.
- Full impact of the shift (April 2011) still to be assessed.
French Cadastre Cost-recovery cost-recovery - No additional state funding.
(with price cuts of up to 97%). - Price cuts will be financed by expected increases in
demand.
34 © 2011 Deloitte
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